What's a SD Curlee?

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S.D. Curlee
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An example of an S.D. Curlee electric bass
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An example of an S.D. Curlee electric bass

S.D. Curlee was a guitar manufacturer from Matteson, Illinois back in the late seventies and early eighties. Company went out of business after that, but for a while their electric basses were popular, much more so than their guitars. They were especially popular in Belgium during the late seventies and early eighties because of the poor products then coming from Fender.
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History

This small enterprise was founded by Randy Curlee around 1975 in Matteson, Illinois. The name S.D was completely fictious, but simply sounded better than the Randy/Curlee combination. According to Michael Wright (Guitar Stories), this independent entrepreneur build and sold around 12000 handcrafted instruments — mainly bass guitars — between 1975 and 1982. Curlee wanted to offer a quality built instrument at an affordable price. Advertising campaigns were rather scarce: only a handful of ads exist. A rather classy 8 page color affair from 1979 and a few B/W flyers got some distribution.

During these years, the Curlee brand was also licensed to Hondo. This branding was a very clever move because in the seventies the Asian market was quite notorious for copying American and British originals without paying any royalties to the owner/designer.
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Construction

The Curlee basses featured a unique blend of neck through body design and had a bolt-on neck, which was anchored in the body with a heavy brass plate.

All of the bass models shared the same basic, almost symmetrical shape, and were available in a fretless version. These were the various models:

* Standard 1 (1 P-bass DiMarzio, mahogany body, maple neck)
* Standard 2 (identical to the above but 2 pick ups)
* Butcher (body made of butcher block maple)
* Curbeck (body made of walnut, maple stripes)
* Summit (body and neck made of laminated walnut)
* Yankee (active electronics and a slightly more modern shape) - released in the early eighties.

Curlees featured state of the art hardware, usually included on much more expensive brands: Gold Grover tuning heads, Badass II bridges and high output DiMarzio's. The 32 1/2' medium scale neck proved a comfortable compromise.
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Cultural effect and availability

Although the brand nowadays enjoys a minor cult-like status, only few famous bassists were spotted with Curlee models in the mid to late seventies. Former Mahavishnu Orchestra bassist Rick Laird had one, Nick Lowe was using a Curlee fretless on a few assignments and that's about it.

As of 2006, Curlee bassess occasionally appear on eBay for about US$400 and are generally considered a poor man's alternative to Alembic Inc.

Mine...
 

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In my little neck of the woods

we knew about them, but nobody had ever seen one in real life. They were sort of the equivalent of Cobra sports cars.

What's it sound like?
 
ooh..me too

It kind of reminds me of a dan armstrong...but it has those double sets of pickups, and the body almost looks like a Hamer, or PRS double-cuttaway....very cool :eek:
 
It's kind of similar-looking

to a Hayman, which I'm still looking for, BTW.
 
I am pretty sure they used to be sold in the sears catalog or Monkey Wards.
 
I remember playing one of their guitars back in the late 1970's in a Southern Illinois music store called "Ye Olde Music", I think Bob Heil who built the early concert sound systems may have owned the store. The necks did not have any finish at all, just bare wood if I remember correctly.
 
Cardioidpotent said:
we knew about them, but nobody had ever seen one in real life. They were sort of the equivalent of Cobra sports cars.

What's it sound like?
The bright punch of an Alembic without the full tonal richness. I turned mine into a piccolo! I've got a clip somewhere. I'll look.
 
I know some guys who still have a Curlee bass.

They're very well built and sound great, but they're heavier than whale shit.
 
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